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Monday, July 7, 2014

Our first few days getting to know the campus.




We arrived in Tianjin Sept 5th 2009 and started exploring the campus and surrounding area the very next day. Below is the entrance into Nan Kai University.
This is the building we taught in.
The Administration Building
We need baskets on the front and back to carry stuff from the market.
This is our apartment building we live in the end apartment on the right on the top floor.
There aren't many cars on campus but they still have traffic police directing what few cars there are.
There is a canal that runs through campus.
The flags are to welcome the new students. I am a little wobbly on my bike, but I haven't caused any accidents yet. Cars and bicycles seem to have equal rights to the road with pedestrians mixed in. You just move forward and try not to stop unexpectedly. We love to ride to the open air market to buy vegetables and fruit.

We inherited bikes from passed BYU teachers. 

There are beautiful lotus ponds on the campus. They aren't in bloom yet, but still pretty. It's fun to see the students arrive on campus with their parents, suitcases, and sometimes bedding. It's just like campuses everywhere. There are very nice dining rooms close to our apartment for the foreign teachers and students. We haven't found the student dining halls.
In the distance you can see the building we will be teaching in. It is very new and we have access to media in the classroom. We don't start teaching until Sept.21st, so we still feel like we are on vacation.
We go out every day to explore the city and to buy something we think we need. Mostly it is just fun to wander around. Tianjin is not a tourist destination, so we are often the only foreigners when we go places. There are a lot of Koreans in the city though. There is a lot of building going on, but the city is clean and has a great energy. I can see why Ginny likes living in New York.
Our memories of the first few weeks in China are that everything seemed so interesting and strange and that we had a hard time figuring out how things worked.  Going to the South-West market for the first time to buy vegetables, we would just point at what we wanted and then hold out our money and let them take what they wanted. 
This is the South West Market but still on campus.
The street right next to the South West Market.
Riding a bike anyplace but on campus was scary and we felt so unsure of what to do and how to do it.  So we would just wait for someone who wanted to cross the street the way we wanted to go and we would follow them.  But after a few weeks, we got the hang of things and were riding our bikes all over the city.  The freedom was exhilarating to be able to go anywhere we wanted to go.
You can't drive a car on campus without a permit but they don't stop bikes.
Nothing about China was what we expected.  We anticipated a rather closed or suspicious society.  What we experienced was exactly the opposite.  People were friendly, gracious and eager to form friendships.  We thought things might be a little backward.  Instead there was energy in the air and a rush to modernize and create.  There was construction everywhere and a cheerful optimism in many people.  Our students were so studious and determined—to some degree even driven.  We were at one of the top 10 universities in China and the competition to be admitted was intense.  Some of our students came from small villages, the first in their family to attend a university.  Many expressed the belief, “Where there’s a will, there’s a way” and they exemplified that motto in their discipline and studies.

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